Great care goes into finding just the right poster child for a story supporting one or another of the immigration lobby's causes. I have sat in on Forum conference sessions where a new immigrant personality was vetted by the conferees only to be dropped before going to the media with the story. Apparently, something in the “bio” turned out to be off-message.

Selection of images for use in a war fought with images is very serious business.

“Hilary Rodham Clinton 'was very helpful in ensuring that INS was aware of the case at the highest level' said Jessica Neuwirth, President of Equality Now. A spokeswoman for Clinton said recently that 'the first lady followed the case very closely' at the time and passed information on it to the National Security Council…. The INS district office in New York was told that 'the White House wants you to release her, so they released her', one agency insider said.” [Asylum Seeker Is Impostor | INS Says Woman's Plea Had Powerful Support, By William Branigin and Douglas Farah Washington Post, December 20, 2000]

After “Adelaide” received asylum in the U.S. Court of appeals for the Second Circuit, the INS completed its exhaustive investigation of “Adelaide's” case.

It found that she was an imposter who stole the identity of another illegal alien.

Another much-publicized poster child, effectively used to end the enforcement of immigration law regarding “unaccompanied minors”:

Edwin Larios Munoz, 13 year-old Honduran “street child” who illegally entered the U.S. and who was caught and detained by INS in a secure California youth center for juvenile criminals.

He eventually received asylum and was called to testify before Congress about mistreatment while in federal custody. He called the youth detention center where he stayed “the worst place I have ever been in life.”

Munoz' testimony riveted the MSM for a while. His freedom-seeking-orphan-thrown-in-jail-by-the-INS story appeared in the LA Times, Boston Globe and San Diego Union-Tribune, and even made the cover of Parade Magazine.

Unfortunately, no one testified before Congress about his apparent lying and violent and aggressive behavior, which had caused the INS to oppose an asylum grant and which had caused the government to transfer the youth to a secure detention facility until the matter could be settled.

Munoz was granted asylum and went into the U.S. foster care system at taxpayer expense in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Nevertheless, and incredibly, four days before Christmas 2005 the Senate approved legislation sponsored by Senators Feinstein (D-Cal) and Brownback (R-Kan) to further liberalize the immigration of “unaccompanied minors.”

The bill was partly written and promoted by the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR and money-making U.S. refugee contractors.

Senator Feinstein, who was responsible for stripping immigration authority from DHS for unaccompanied minors, concedes “It was a very hard battle to get this approved by the Senate and we still have a tough battle in the House.”

Would the Senate have even considered the bill if Edwin Munoz had been on the front page of Parade magazine after the latest turn of events?

The Senate bill revamps the rarely used Special Immigrant Juvenile Visa program “to make it a useful and flexible means of providing permanent protection for deserving unaccompanied alien children who are deemed a dependent of the State by the courts due to abuse, neglect, or abandonment.”

The average beneficiary of the bill: a Central American minor joining family members already illegally in the U.S..

But the Treason Lobby has grander visions for this bill.

The Feinstein/Brownback bill is an expression of the assumption that the American nanny state can redress the wrongs endured by anyone from anywhere in the world who manages by any means to cross the border.

In addition to expanded asylum opportunities for youth who manage to get across the border—lured, aided and abetted by the welfare state and human traffickers—the U.S. offers a separate, parallel program for Unaccompanied Refugee Minors. These are minors selected by the UNHCR and U.S. refugee contractors for resettlement to the U.S. from around the globe.

“immigration courts granting asylum to 'street children' who having lived alone, homeless in their country … flee to the U.S. in an attempt to escape gangs, chemical dependency, governmental mistreatment and starvation… the 'street kids' have very little education and often suffer from mental illness… and the challenge is to place these minors in good secure homes where they can receive mental health and substance abuse treatment.”

According to a 2004 ORR report, the U.S. is considering resettling “orphans” from “Liberia who are currently residing in Guinea” and “a number of Sudanese girls from Kenya that the UNHCR deems vulnerable and in need of resettlement. And in Thailand, there are Burmese refugee children that will primarily be resettled [in the U.S.]with the surrogate families in which they currently reside.” (Emphasis added.)